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Cornyn went to great lengths to avoid Trump's wrath. The Texas senator lost his seat anyway

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Cornyn went to great lengths to avoid Trump's wrath. The Texas senator lost his seat anyway
News

News

Cornyn went to great lengths to avoid Trump's wrath. The Texas senator lost his seat anyway

2026-05-27 12:06 Last Updated At:12:31

PLANO, Texas (AP) — As it turned out, it would never be enough.

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn tried for more than a year to show Donald Trump and Texas Republicans that he and the president were on the same team.

Cornyn posted a photo of himself reading Trump's “The Art of the Deal.” He proposed legislation to rename a stretch of interstate in Trump's honor. Perhaps most glaringly, the Senate institutionalist who long supported the filibuster reversed his position in a failed effort to advance voting restrictions that are a priority for the president.

None of it worked. On Tuesday, Cornyn became the latest in a line of Republicans who lost their primaries after falling out of favor with a president with little tolerance for dissent and a seemingly insatiable appetite for retribution. The four-term senator lost by double digits to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who Trump endorsed last week as “a true MAGA Warrior.”

Cornyn, on the other hand, “was VERY disloyal to me,” Trump wrote on social media.

Trump's intervention in the Texas runoff came after weeks of successfully backing primary challengers in Indiana, Louisiana and Kentucky as revenge against incumbents who broke with his agenda.

Cornyn’s attempt to avoid the same fate made even some of his supporters wince.

“You look at the positions he took to please the president and the groveling and whatever,” said former Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, a Republican and Trump critic who didn't seek reelection during the president's first midterm in 2018. “It was rather painful to watch.”

Cornyn's loss wasn't for a lack of political gymnastics and astronomical campaign spending.

His campaign began running an advertisement last summer — part of an astounding nearly-$100-million air war by the senator and allied groups — with Cornyn looking into the camera and saying, “I voted with President Trump 99% of the time.”

On Cornyn's campaign homepage, Trump and Cornyn stand side-by-side with thumbs pointed upward in an image aimed at projecting solidarity. Deeper in the website, the category titled “The Trump-Cornyn Record” notes the senator's role securing votes for Trump's signature 2017 tax cut bill.

Cornyn has also been championing provisions in Trump's signature tax-and-spending legislation to finance work on the U.S.-Mexico border wall.

The senator had dismissed the project as “naive” during Trump's 2016 campaign. But in January, he stood along a section of completed wall in Texas' Rio Grande Valley touting the measure's $11 billion for Texas contractors' work at “the direction of the president of the United States, to whom I am very grateful.”

Cornyn's praise for his party's leader and president were not unusual, but they clash with a statement Cornyn made in May 2023, when Trump was mounting his presidential comeback campaign.

“Trump’s time has passed him by,” he told reporters. “I don’t think President Trump understands that when you run in a general election, you have to appeal to voters beyond your base.”

Trump would go on to easily win the nomination and carry every battleground state in the general election.

Cornyn would hew closely to the president for the first 16 months of his second administration, hoping at the outside chance of his endorsement or to keeping him from weighing in at all.

But Trump did not forget the past slights.

“John Cornyn is a good man, and I worked well with him, but he was not supportive of me when times were tough,” he wrote on social media while endorsing Paxton.

Cornyn has playfully worked to promote Trump fandom, last year posting a picture on social media of himself thoughtfully peering into the pages of Trump's 1987 memoir and business advice book, “The Art of the Deal.”

In a more obvious gesture, he proposed designating a section of a U.S. highway from the Texas Gulf Coast to Montana as “Interstate 47,” to honor a 47th president with a well-documented love of naming things after himself. In a news release about the proposal, filed just over two weeks before Tuesday's runoff, Cornyn said it would be known as the “Trump Interstate.”

The more tectonic shift occurred in March, after Trump had teased a possible endorsement of either Cornyn or Paxton in the runoff.

Paxton swiftly said he would consider dropping his candidacy if the Republican-controlled Senate lifted the filibuster and passed the SAVE America Act, a series of voting restrictions that Trump has described as an essential part of his agenda.

The following week, Cornyn wrote an op-ed in the New York Post — Trump's favorite hometown newspaper — backing away from his previous support of the filibuster. He vowed to “support whatever changes to Senate rules that may prove necessary” to get the bill “through the Senate and on the president's desk for his signature.”

Flake watched with unease.

“I know John and his long-held positions on the filibuster and the Senate’s institutions,” he said. “No office is worth that.”

Bedayn reported from San Antonio. Associated Press writer Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington contributed to this report.

President Donald Trump walks down the stairs of Air Force One upon his arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Md., Friday, May 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis M. Alvarez)

President Donald Trump walks down the stairs of Air Force One upon his arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Md., Friday, May 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis M. Alvarez)

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, center right, speaks alongside, from left, daughter Danley Cornyn, wife Sandy Cornyn and daughter Haley Cornyn, during a primary runoff election night event after losing the Republican party's nomination Tuesday, May 26, 2026, in Austin. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, center right, speaks alongside, from left, daughter Danley Cornyn, wife Sandy Cornyn and daughter Haley Cornyn, during a primary runoff election night event after losing the Republican party's nomination Tuesday, May 26, 2026, in Austin. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Brandon Nimmo singled for Texas three batters into the bottom of the first inning a night after three Houston pitchers combined for a no-hitter against the Rangers.

Four more hits and eight runs later, the Rangers were on their way to 10-7 victory made a little more interesting by four homers of at least 422 feet from the Astros.

“It doesn't make any sense sometimes,” Texas manager Skip Schumaker said. “You're trying to think about different ways to win games, last night, late at night. Again this morning. And then we come out and walk and slug. It's kind of a crazy game.”

Jake Burger had a two-run single with the bases loaded, Evan Carter drove home two more with a bouncing triple past first baseman Christian Walker into the right-field corner and Joc Pederson capped the eight-run first with a three-run homer off Jason Alexander after the right-hander had struck him out to start the inning.

“I don’t even remember yesterday,” said Burger, who had struck out in his previous three at-bats with runners in scoring position. “But no, when you see Nimmo break it open, get the hit, everybody kind of takes a deep breath. I don't know if there's anything in the history books of somebody scoring eight runs after a no hit."

Actually, there is.

The first eight-run first inning for the Rangers in 14 years was the second-largest for a team that went hitless in its previous game, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The Chicago White Sox had a nine-run first against the Boston Americans in the second game of a doubleheader on Sept. 27, 1905, after getting no-hit by Bill Dinneen in the opener.

Tatsuya Imai, Steven Okert and Alimber Santa, who was making his major league debut, held Texas hitless in a 9-0 victory in the series opener on Monday night.

After Pederson's strikeout, Alejandro Osuna walked before Nimmo pulled a soft single into right. Josh Jung walked to set up Burger, and after Carter's triple, Ezequiel Duran brought him home with a double to the base of the wall in center.

Kyle Higashioka was hit by a pitch from Alexander (1-1) to bring Pederson back to the plate. His 399-foot drive landed about 12 rows deep in the right-field stands.

Carter also homered and had three hits with four RBIs to end a 2-for-24 slide. Burger had the third of nine Texas hits with the bases loaded this season.

Duran's second run-scoring hit came in the eighth and helped make things a little more comfortable for Texas after the fourth Houston homer in the ninth — the first of the season for Jeremy Peña.

“I think we all know we're better than that,” Carter said, referring to Houston's fifth combined no-hitter, including one in the 2022 World Series. “It's not like we're overhauling anything. Everybody knows that we're better than that.”

Yordan Alvarez homered twice for Houston, the first a three-run shot that went 449 feet. Cam Smith and Peña went deeper with solo shots.

Smith's 457-foot drive in the eighth made him the only player with two homers of at least 450 feet this season. Peña sent his 452-footer into the seats above the Houston bullpen in left-center field.

The Rangers had to go to closer Jacob Latz with two outs in the eighth. He finished off his sixth save with a hard grounder from Alvarez two batters after Peña's drive.

“We needed those add-on runs,” Schumaker said. “They did a really good job coming back, got our closer in the game. After being down eight runs, that was a win pretty much on their side.”

Texas' most recent eight-run first at home came in a 9-0 victory over Tampa Bay on May 3, 2004, when the Rangers played at Globe Life Park, across the street from their current home of Globe Life Field.

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Texas Rangers' Jake Burger smiles in the dugout after scoring a run in the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Jake Burger smiles in the dugout after scoring a run in the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Houston Astros' pitcher Jason Alexander sits in the dugout during the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Houston Astros' pitcher Jason Alexander sits in the dugout during the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Brandon Nimmo rounds second base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Brandon Nimmo rounds second base during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Ezequiel Duran reacts after hitting a double during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

Texas Rangers' Ezequiel Duran reacts after hitting a double during the first inning of a baseball game against the Houston Astros, Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

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